kx000
Valued Senior Member
Thanks for realizing.
One day you will too.
Thanks for realizing.
The Failures of Biblical Revelation
The Bible's record of prophecy is a miserable failure, for example:
Ezekiel 29,30. The land of Egypt will be laid waste by Nebuchadnezzar, and all its people killed and rivers dried up. It will remain uninhabited for forty years.
Um, this did not happen.
If the Bible is the product of human beings rather than a Divine Author, we can easily explain its historical, scientific and moral inaccuracies. It’s too bad that it didn’t have an explicit prophecy of somethings like man’s landing on the moon. Just one thing like this would have really been something awesome.
Instead, biblical prophecy is either vague, wrong, coincidence, a matter of ordinary prediction, or it can be more-simply explained as written after the fact.
Getting back to the Bible, “our conscience determines how we read what we regard as a sacred text, my friend Victor says. “In all these cases, believers clearly read the Bible to find support for moral principles that they have already developed from some other source. Only a few lunatics nowadays take seriously the Bible's support for genocide or slavery.
“I hope I have make clear that while I wish people were less gullible, less willing to believe in the most preposterous supernatural notions, I still have high regard for the basic decency of most human beings. Many people are good. But they are not good because of religion. They are good despite religion.”
“The Bible is indeed a mixed bag, containing some wisdom, common to humanity at that time, and much cruelty and ignorance, also typical of people at that time. The Bible is not uniquely wise. For laws that govern civil society, we might prefer Solomon to Moses. Humankind’s holy books are what one would expect if they were products of human culture.”
SciWriter,
You are full of yourself.
One day you will too.
you showed a refutation with yet another tentative argument ..... as several posters have already pointed out, you are simply talking about your opinions and then extol the glories of logic when someone critiques it.They weren't identical, as I showed.
What if the beginning wasn't "total chaos"?SciWriter said:If the the beginning was total chaos, wouldn't that be a really big mess of disorder?
or even better, by what criteria does one distinguish between something that is chaos and something that one doesn't know in full?What if the beginning wasn't "total chaos"?
What if you don't understand entropy as well as you think?
you showed a refutation with yet another tentative argument ..... ..
or even better, by what criteria does one distinguish between something that is chaos and something that one doesn't know in full?
What if you don't understand entropy as well as you think?
no you didn'tYes, with science.
already did it in my original (tentative) critique of your (tentative) argumentWhere's your showing that God is not just a simpleton notion?
No need to discuss evolution at the moment because you haven't even begun to explain how evolution automatically renders god obsolete ... aside from your hot air and totally tentative ideas about abiogenesisWhere's your evolution replacement details?
anyone who esteems tentative arguments as authoritative is a joke, period ... and intellectually dishonest when they attempt to bring scientific discussion to such nonsenseYou don't have any. A cosmic joke.
No need to discuss evolution at the moment
Try empiricism is necessarily limited in inquiry at the points of macro and microcosm because it is necessarily metonymic (IOW it only has scope to a segment of perception, so "chaos theory", chance, etc fill in the blanks when perception putters out).I didn't think you'd have anything else substantial or even tentative, LG, but at least you had that one observation I liked.
So, shall we then go with a Creator Being arranging what we thought was just chaos?
OK, no one is putting anything good, but one thing by LG, so we are going to have to derive the Creator; yes! meaning me and whomever wants to help.
The Creator needs to be surmised because it doesn’t even let out a peep about its existence, which is odd, but we’ll go with that since personal testimony can be all over the place.
So, what we thought could have been the chaos of the big bang could either have been an orderly event leading to what we had that the Creator completely planned and foresaw or at least had the right mixture to lead to some human mammal life.
We do know that the species were not made outright, intact, as is, and immutable, so that’s why we’re, and we know of the big bang and the possible inflation, so that’s why we say that the Creator would have been behind the creation of the universe 14 billion years ago. It is no matter where the material came from, whether of Himself or made from nothing, for it is the Creator’s existence that we are attending to, and if He is, then He can certainly do things way beyond just some terra-forming, that is, total universe forming.
Next time, we’ll get into how He became or how He can be eternal.
Who wants to help?
What if the beginning wasn't "total chaos"?
What if you don't understand entropy as well as you think?